2,5" SSD RAID 1/NRAID Modul for 2 CF card, with SATA hostinterface
@Robert (mindbender): could this be a fast reliable drive to use in my Intel ATOM dual core. Together with 2 ultrafast CF cards
I think speed will not be that good
- 2,5" RAID storage solution with up to 20% less boot time
- For usage in extreme working environment qualified
- Noiseless, shock prevention, lower power consumption, high/low
temperature resistance, better reading comprehension
- Support SATA 1.5Gb/s Host Interface
- 2,5" SATA HD Type
- Support RAID1 (disk mirroring) and NRAID (Non RAID)
- Support IDE to CF card (only for UMDA Mode)
- 2 CF card (UMDA Mode 3,3-5,0mm, CF4.0, ATA Interface,
3,3V/5V) can be used
- Host Chip capacity up to 1 TB
- Two LED for status and access
- Compatible for all operating systems
- Support PnP - no drivers needed
- Certificate: CE/FCC
- Scope of supply: SF2020-2F-S1, Manual, CD with manual
http://www.raidsonic.de/en/pages/produc ... ectID=5183
Can be order at zercom for 65 euros:
http://www.zercom.nl/index.php?p=35&f=1&a=118321
Raidsonic SSD RAID 1 for 2 CF cards
Raidsonic SSD RAID 1 for 2 CF cards
Alternate has a product with 6 SDHC cards.
Not sure what the performance of this device will be.
http://www.alternate.nl/html/product/So ... State+Disk
Not sure what the performance of this device will be.
http://www.alternate.nl/html/product/So ... State+Disk
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Raidsonic SSD RAID 1 for 2 CF cards
Yes, using SanDisk Extreme cards, or the golden Panasonic cards you will have a both fast and reliable system. RAID can use parallelism of multiple drive to increase performance. And a fast card uses parallelism on the multiple flash devices on board. But this combination may still be a slower than a native SSD drive using parallelism on 16 flash devices because in this case parallelism isn't restricted within a card.
I'm not really sure what market these products are targeting. They appear cheap, but when including fast and reliable storage cards they cost more than a reliable SSD drive. Perhaps they want to target people who still have a large stock of cards, but that's got to be a niche. Most likely they want to sell a product that offers people cheap solid state storage, without the reliability risk of selling cheap storage. If things go wrong, they can always point at the cheap cards you've purchased yourself as the cause of the drives unreliability.
I'm not really sure what market these products are targeting. They appear cheap, but when including fast and reliable storage cards they cost more than a reliable SSD drive. Perhaps they want to target people who still have a large stock of cards, but that's got to be a niche. Most likely they want to sell a product that offers people cheap solid state storage, without the reliability risk of selling cheap storage. If things go wrong, they can always point at the cheap cards you've purchased yourself as the cause of the drives unreliability.